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AI-IP Guy's avatar

So, just putting this out there: I'm a litigator in private firm practice primarily working in IP issues with an interest in AI (both safety and legal issues). If Zvi or others have questions about IP--especially those that fall under the "is" side of the "is/ought" divide (being in private practice unfortunately constrains what I'm allowed to say that has a normative component, particularly in any non-pseudonymous context) regarding copyright law and relevant cases / filings, I'm around as an interlocutor who may be able to provide some clarity on the content and scope of current law and/or document analysis if people have questions.

Please note that nothing I say is or is intended to create an attorney-client relationship or to constitute legal advice to Zvi or anyone else. I urge anyone to hire and consult with an attorney before taking action that has legal implications (IP-related or otherwise).

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Well-Ordered's avatar

By typing a relatively short string of characters (call it a "prompt") into a browser's URL bar, one can cause the browser to display the full text of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. That is a true fact about the world. No one seriously thinks that this is the browser-makers' fault. So why is ChatGPT different? Why had it "better not work"?

Similarly, would "If users are actually using [Chrome] to get the text of New York Times articles on purpose for actual use, in practice, that seems clearly not okay" make sense and be a reason to be upset with Google (as the makers of Chrome)?

I'll also note that we live in a world in which all books and all movies are as a matter of practice available for free on the internet. Do with that as you will—but it's the empirical truth about the world we live in. You can't pretend that somehow copyright is what causes authors to get paid for their works, not when it's trivial to e.g. download books off of z-library. And yet somehow authors make money anyway. Why? Obviously not because of copyright! Not when the law is so unenforced (and it seems in practice unenforceable.) As a matter of legal realism, whatever it is that causes authors to get paid, it's not actually copyright law as law. Perhaps it's copyright "law" as a norm, i.e. that people would feel guilty for pirating books, or even merely feel like it's "just not done" to pirate books. Or maybe people just sensibly feel that it is in their own enlightened self-interest that authors get paid for books (at least, that's what I tell myself whenever I pay for a book.)

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